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Aletta, Alessio. "From the dark wood to the asphalt jungle: Adaptation and appropriation in Detective Dante." Between 10. 20 2020. Accessed 2Jan. 2021. <https://ojs.unica.it/in ... tween/article/view/4220>. 
Added by: joachim (1/2/21, 12:42 PM)   Last edited by: joachim (1/2/21, 5:44 PM)
Resource type: Web Article
Language: en: English
Peer reviewed
DOI: 10.13125/2039-6597/4220
BibTeX citation key: Aletta2020
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Categories: General
Keywords: "Detective Dante", "Divina Commedia", Adaptation, Bartoli. Lorenzo, Crime comics, Dante, Italy, Recchioni. Roberto
Creators: Aletta
Collection: Between
Views: 5/1431
Attachments   URLs   https://ojs.unica. ... /article/view/4220
Abstract
Detective Dante (2005-2007) is a comicbook miniseries written by Lorenzo Bartoli and Roberto Recchioni. The eponymous hero, Henry Dante, is a violent policeman who, haunted by the ghost of his wife, moves from New York to the fictional ‘Paradise City’. The series, composed by 24 issues divided in three cycles (Inferno, Purgatorio, Paradiso), is noticeably influenced by the Divine Comedy both in its general outline and in some single episodes; nevertheless, it ultimately tells an original story.
Through a close reading of the first issue as well as more general considerations about the series in its entirety, this paper investigates the intertextual relations between Detective Dante with the Divine Comedy.
In the context of Dantean comics, this series exhibits a number of unusual traits: its references are thematical and narratological, rather than graphic; it contaminates elements from the Commedia with a modern and noir setting, generating unique combinations; most importantly, it subverts the well-established hierarchy between literary source and comicbook adaptation.
  
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